Atheists are hypocrites

Author: Ehyeh

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SkepticalOne
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@Public-Choice
but the point is, you don't have to

Can you, right now, prove a zircon fragment is 4.3 billion years old?
Well, not right this second... I'm still in bed, but the point is the evidence can be verified. 
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@3RU7AL
but the point is, you don't have to
Can you, right now, prove a zircon fragment is 4.3 billion years old?
bingo
Sir, you have to wait for numbers to be called before exclaiming "bingo". 😉

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@SkepticalOne
As for the BoP, I have none - I've not claimed to have solved Hard solispism and I'm not trying to persuade you. 
exactly
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@SkepticalOne
the evidence can be verified
Then verify it. Because I doubt zircon is 4.3 billion years old due to that being inconsistent with so much of what we know about plate tectonics, the fossil record, and the decay of u234 and u238 which has an equilibrium of 2 million years, and by 10 million years more than 99.9% of u238 would be completely gone. But what we see in the earth's crust and all other places is a disequilibrium of u238 and u234, with more u238 existing than u234. So it is impossible that a zircon fragment is 4.3 billion years old. That would mean all the u238 in the earth should be almost completely gone, since it has a half life of 4.46 billion years. But the data doesn't show that. [1] [2]

I would much rather err on the side that finds dinosaurs in North America (e.g. real, undisputable, physical evidence) and u238 measurements detected globally than a scientist's approximations for zircon being 4 billion years old. But that's just my 2c.

Because, if uniformitarian principles are true, then it would be physically impossible to find dinosaurs in North America, since they did not "appear" until about 250 million years ago. By then the earth's crust would have been separating for 4.05 billion years, creating a gigantic chasm between North America and the rest of the world, making the evolution of dinosaurs in North America highly improbable. Either one accepts dinosaurs are 4.3 billion years old and every single dating method is wrong, or one accepts spontaneously similar evolution of the same dinosaur species at the same time despite completely different environments between Europe and North America at the time. Both cases are highly improbable.

So this and the u238 decay tables leads to a conclusion that the earth is likely significantly younger than what the old earth scientists say.

SOURCES:
Ramshutu
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@Sidewalker
I don’t think I’ve ever seen you playing the BOP game, but I’m pretty new here, in any event, in context, I’m challenging the validity of the BOP game that is being played here.  I think you are saying you believe in the existence of an external reality but you cannot meet the so-called burden of proof.  

There is a subtlety here. Firstly, I assume that “an external reality” exists (by which I am assuming you mean the world around me external to my brain) - there are no other assumptions that I have any basis to make.

If I use this in an argument, it would typically be as a base assumption - “assuming that…” which doesn’t need burden of proof; because you’re saying it’s an assumption. If, on the other hand I make claims about that reality, what it is or how it works. That I would require a burden or proof for.

Any time, I put forward an idea as truth, or probably/likely truth; I would typically require the burden of proof.

So according to the rules of the BOP game, you can’t meet the burden of proof, so you are irrational and logically incoherent, and I’m more logical, more intelligent, and blah blah blah.

Not really. Saying that I appear to be conscious - is arguably meeting the burden of proof for whether I am conscious based on its definition. If I were to make claims about what consciousness is, or that something non human was conscious; then I would need to meet my burden of proof for those claims.

I made the point earlier that our state of conscious awareness is a feature that trumps all others in the matter of epistemic authority.  The only thing we know in an unmediated manner is that we are conscious, Descartes’ “I think therefore I am” comes to mind.  Regarding external reality, all we can know are phenomena: things as they present themselves to us; things as they appear to us, not things as they are.  The world in its own right, the noumenal world, can only be inferred. You answered both questions with reference to experiential evidence such as “I appear to observe” and “I know what that feels like”, at the same time acknowledging that you can’t meet the so-called burden of proof, which validates my point about the BOP game.  You can’t meet the BOP for belief in the existence of external reality or internal reality, what exactly is the point of the BOP game, what does it have to day about the existence of anything?

The issue with burden of proof is that it relates to disagreements. For consciousness and the existence of external reality - is more of a shared assumption by everyone. If someone contested whether shared reality existed - and you wanted to claim external reality definitely existed, then the burden of proof would be on you - and you couldn’t meet it - likewise for someone who said it doesn’t exist.

You meet your burden of the claim that something exists by virtue of having the conversation at all - with most other things being irrelevant to the conversation as they are unknowable.

Nope, not at all, you are the first BOPer to answer, and you have pretty much acknowledged that you can’t hit the BOP pitch either, nobody can, so the question becomes, what is the point of pitching the BOP when there is no ball to hit, why do you guys think it somehow makes a relevant point about Theism.

I think you may misunderstand - nothing I’ve said would be subject to BoP - as I’m not making any claims. I’m not really expressing the truth of an idea  - that’s when you subject yourself to BoP; if you don’t make claims, you can make assumptions from which you can argue the conclusions follow if the assumption is correct - but if the assumption is challenged, that’s where BoP comes into play.

OK, my question is, why do you play the BOP game, what exactly do you think it establishes about Theism?

You’ve asked this a few times - but I left it till last; it’s fairly easy.

Humans have the ability to express ideas that can be false. We do it a lot, and we have an exceptional imagination for coming up with objects, things, explanations, ideas, etc - that are not true. We do it a lot. When you or I think up an explanation or an idea - it could be reality, or not.

In the context of an argument - we’re trying to establish or come to some agreement about what is or is not true. 

Normally - especially when talking about religion, most arguments boil down to a mere handful of underlying ideas or premises; if these premises are true, most of the rest follows. It’s is those premises that are contested. 

For example, using morality to show the existence of God, is a good one: the contested premise is that morality is an objective thing.

When a premise is contested ; both sides have to figure out what’s true or false. This is where BoP comes in: How do we establish who should, or shouldn’t, prove or disprove any particular claim? Who has “the burden” in any individual case? It can’t be arbitrary.

Some ideas can be disproven, some can be proven, but many are unfalsifiable: can’t really be proven wrong, in any practical sense. If the burden of proof is on the disproved - then you can win arguments by coming up with ideas that are not true - but hard or impossible to disprove - that would prevent any intellect discussion this way around, thus the burden of proof must therefore be on the positive claim.

I see it invoked - and invoke it - primarily in two scenarios:

1.) Where someone is being lazy, or specifically in cases where I’ve spent time and effort crafting large responses to points, and the other person is just throwing out claims without proof. It’s not fair in me to carry both the proof and disproof; so I’ll often challenge people to support their assertions in this context

2.) Where an assumption is challenged that is hard or impossible to be disproven even if it’s false: but is being presented as if truthful. IE - we have no reason to believe that this is actually true, but you’re arguing as if it is. The point here is mostly to highlight that the point relies on an unsupported assertion, despite any vehemence that results.

If you’re arguing that you don’t know whether your particular belief is true or false; only that you feel it’s true, or have faith that its true, and don’t argue that faith as a basis for arguing it is true in the context of the argument - you don’t need a burden, as you’re not claiming anything.

If, however, and it’s quite common in many theists, that you want to express that unqualified faith, and unsupported position of feeling, but also want to use it; or your conclusions as a basis for expressing that others are wrong about something (I’m not suggesting you specifically - I haven’t read enough here), that’s when burden of proof applies.

GnosticChristianBishop
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@Shila
Sure, and note how atheists have better stats.

Regards
DL
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@GnosticChristianBishop
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Sure, and note how atheists have better stats.

Regards
DL
That is because they concentrate on the know knowns unlike others that are lost in the know unknowns.

SkepticalOne
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@Public-Choice
the evidence can be verified
Then verify it
How would that help you? Are you going to verify my verification? 

That would mean all the u238 in the earth should be almost completely gone, since it has a half life of 4.46 billion years.
No, it would mean about half of u238 has transmuted to a different element. 

I would much rather err on the side that finds dinosaurs in North America (e.g. real, undisputable, physical evidence) and u238 measurements detected globally
Neither of the 'sides' you're describing are denying dinosaurs in NA or that U238 is common.

Because, if uniformitarian principles are true, then it would be physically impossible to find dinosaurs in North America, since they did not "appear" until about 250 million years ago.
North America split from Africa 200 million years ago. What's physically impossible about dinosaurs living atop a tectonic plate while it splits and moves away from Africa?

My mother is a young earth creationist (which I assume you are). I've had all these discussions before, my friend. You're being misled.



Shila
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@Public-Choice
So this and the u238 decay tables leads to a conclusion that the earth is likely significantly younger than what the old earth scientists say.
But just how young is it?
The Bible puts it down 7 days in Genesis. Each day being a 1000 years.

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@Shila
It also states that serpents and donkeys can talk human.

What that timing thing is telling you is a truth.

The bible's scenarios and archetypal characters are fiction and timeless.

They are to represent all of us, as good fiction does.

Unfortunately, the less bright began to believe in the supernatural and corrupted a decent naturalist religion.  

The good was spelled Chrestianity while the evil became Christianity.

Regards
DL
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@Ehyeh
Your logic assumes
  1. That Descartes Meditations and Socrates/Phaedo is correct
  2. You must agree to those in order to be an atheist
Maybe those texts are correct.  But you don't necessarily have have to agree with them to be an atheist.  In that case, an atheist wouldn't be a hypocrite.

Also, there's probable certainty (aka not being 100% sure of something, but making an educated guess on what is more likely).  For example, assuming the sun will rise tomorrow.  There's a chance it won't, but we would estimate the odds of it rising are higher than the odds of it aren't.

In this case, an atheist just believes that the big bang theory is more probable than creationism. 
Lair77
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Also, why hold atheists to a higher standard than theists?
If theists can believe in god without 100% proof, then atheists can not believe in god without 100% proof.
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@Lair77
Well if someone disagrees with metaphysical solipsism being the most likely, they were free to show me why. None of them did. I also don't hold theists or atheists to any sort of standards, what others do is none of my business as long as it isn't malicious.  I was simply pointing out some atheists are indeed hypocrites.
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@Ehyeh
Your title and first sentence both said atheists are hypocrites.   Literally every group, demographic or belief system has "some" people who are hypocrites.  There are plenty of theists who are hypocrites.  It's kind of strange to single out atheists.

Also, why does an atheist have to prove that God doesn't exist? 
3RU7AL
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@Lair77
If theists can believe in god without 100% proof, then atheists can not believe in god without 100% proof.
EXACTLY
Ehyeh
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@Lair77
So whenever i want to talk on a subject am i ought to bring up every other subject on the planet? when i talk about how children should be provided for must i also talk about how donkeys must be provided for too? how about the elderly? the disabled? we cant miss them out. In the end this goes on ad infinitum. If i point out the flaws in christianity should i do it too islam and all other religions too? do you really see that as realistic? i don't have enough TIME to sit here talking about every topic on the planet.
Ehyeh
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@Lair77
When did i say an atheist has to prove God doesn't exist? that isn't the topic of stipulation.
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You wrote that Descartes meditations and the unreliability of our senses as an argument against atheists.

Based on that, it seems like your original post is essentially saying atheists need to prove that our senses and knowledge are reliable to rule out the existence of God.  Maybe you didn't mean that, but it certainly reads like it.

Ehyeh
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@Lair77
No, they need to prove the senses reliable to be certain of materialism and therefore saying God cannot exist. Not all atheists are hypocrites. Only those who say there is no god/gods. Although even if materialism were true god could still exist, he would just be less needed it seems.
Polytheist-Witch
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@Lair77
If the reason you're posting here is because you feel like someone is forcing you to believe in gods then let me clue you in. Nobody gives a flying fuck if you believe in any god. Go on about your day and feel good about yourself.
Shila
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@GnosticChristianBishop
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It also states that serpents and donkeys can talk human.

What that timing thing is telling you is a truth.

The bible's scenarios and archetypal characters are fiction and timeless.

They are to represent all of us, as good fiction does.

Unfortunately, the less bright began to believe in the supernatural and corrupted a decent naturalist religion.  

The good was spelled Chrestianity while the evil became Christianity.

Regards

DL
The only way Eve could have communicated with the serpent is if the serpent spoke. So Genesis is very logical covering the incident.
The serpent was also able to read the true intent of God.
Genesis 3:4 “You will not certainly die,” the serpent said to the woman. 5 “For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

Genesis also tells us how the serpent lost that ability.
Genesis 3:14 So the Lord God said to the serpent, “Because you have done this,
“Cursed are you above all livestock
    and all wild animals!
You will crawl on your belly
    and you will eat dust
    all the days of your life.

Why are you struggling with facts articulated in Genesis.


SkepticalOne
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@Ehyeh
Well if someone disagrees with metaphysical solipsism being the most likely, they were free to show me why. None of them did.
That is attempting to shift a burden. Why would anyone need to disprove what hasn't been proven? Also, there were other issues with your argument which you failed to address. Namely, atheism isn't a worldview. Ie. Someone can believe in anything (accept gods) and still be an atheist.

I also don't hold theists or atheists to any sort of standards,
Sure you do. If there is no standard, there can be no hypocrites. 
GnosticChristianBishop
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@Shila
I do not struggle with the story.

What facts?

Can a myth be known as factual?

If you believe talking serpents and donkeys are logical and or real, then I do not know how to continue.

All I can do is offer my sympathies.

Regards
DL 
Shila
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@GnosticChristianBishop
The only way Eve could have communicated with the serpent is if the serpent spoke. So Genesis is very logical covering the incident.
The serpent was also able to read the true intent of God.
Genesis 3:4 “You will not certainly die,” the serpent said to the woman. 5 “For God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.”

Genesis also tells us how the serpent lost that ability.
Genesis 3:14 So the Lord God said to the serpent, “Because you have done this,
“Cursed are you above all livestock
    and all wild animals!
You will crawl on your belly
    and you will eat dust
    all the days of your life.

Why are you struggling with facts articulated in Genesis.

-->
@Shila
I do not struggle with the story.

What facts?

Can a myth be known as factual?

If you believe talking serpents and donkeys are logical and or real, then I do not know how to continue.

All I can do is offer my sympathies.

Regards
DL
The Bible spanned across several generations. Yet there isn’t a single mention of any doubts regarding the talking serpent.

In fact Genesis reaffirms how crafty the serpent was.
Genesis 3:1 Now the serpent was more crafty than any of the wild animals the LORD God had made. He said to the woman, “Did God really say, ‘You must not eat from any tree in the garden’?”


Sidewalker
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@Ramshutu
I don’t think I’ve ever seen you playing the BOP game, but I’m pretty new here, in any event, in context, I’m challenging the validity of the BOP game that is being played here.  I think you are saying you believe in the existence of an external reality but you cannot meet the so-called burden of proof.  
There is a subtlety here. Firstly, I assume that “an external reality” exists (by which I am assuming you mean the world around me external to my brain) - there are no other assumptions that I have any basis to make.
OK, and how is that different from a Theist assuming that a transcendent reality exists?

If I use this in an argument, it would typically be as a base assumption - “assuming that…” which doesn’t need burden of proof; because you’re saying it’s an assumption. If, on the other hand I make claims about that reality, what it is or how it works. That I would require a burden or proof for.

Any time, I put forward an idea as truth, or probably/likely truth; I would typically require the burden of proof.
You must know that Theism is a belief based on faith, that’s no secret, so when a Theist claims faith in a transcendent realm why is that making claims about that reality, what it is, and how it works.  Don’t pretend that BOPers don’t make claims about internal and external reality all the time, you haven’t explained why Theism, and only Theism, carries a burden of proof.
 
There is no subtlety here, there is only game playing. 

So according to the rules of the BOP game, you can’t meet the burden of proof, so you are irrational and logically incoherent, and I’m more logical, more intelligent, and blah blah blah.
Not really. Saying that I appear to be conscious - is arguably meeting the burden of proof for whether I am conscious based on its definition. If I were to make claims about what consciousness is, or that something non human was conscious; then I would need to meet my burden of proof for those claims.
OK, and saying I’m a Theist is arguable meeting the burden of proof for whether I am a Theist based on its definition.  When are you going to get around to explaining all the commotion and demands for burden of proof that happens when someone says they are a Theist?

I made the point earlier that our state of conscious awareness is a feature that trumps all others in the matter of epistemic authority.  The only thing we know in an unmediated manner is that we are conscious, Descartes’ “I think therefore I am” comes to mind.  Regarding external reality, all we can know are phenomena: things as they present themselves to us; things as they appear to us, not things as they are.  The world in its own right, the noumenal world, can only be inferred. You answered both questions with reference to experiential evidence such as “I appear to observe” and “I know what that feels like”, at the same time acknowledging that you can’t meet the so-called burden of proof, which validates my point about the BOP game.  You can’t meet the BOP for belief in the existence of external reality or internal reality, what exactly is the point of the BOP game, what does it have to day about the existence of anything?

The issue with burden of proof is that it relates to disagreements.
Whoa, I think you slipped up there my friend.  Don’t you guys like to insist that the BOP is on the Theist because they are making a claim, and not on you, because Atheism is just lack belief?  If that’s the case, then there is no disagreement, BOPers insist that Atheism is not making a claim, so where is the disagreement.  For the Atheist to disagree with the Theist, then there must be a counterclaim, and if there is a counterclaim then there is a BOP.

For consciousness and the existence of external reality - is more of a shared assumption by everyone.
Well, not everyone, a lot of people claim consciousness is an illusion, and a lot of others believe in the philosophy of Idealism.  I'm pretty familiar with philosophy as a subject matter, and I  threw these out there in the first place because philosophically speaking, there is no way to actually "prove" either one.  In you can go to the hundreds of years of voluminous philosophical discourse and find me a conclusive proof on either subject matter, please tell me about it, I'd be interested in reading it.  Same goes for the existence of God proof that you guys like to insist on, and there's thousands of years of discourse on that.

If someone contested whether shared reality existed - and you wanted to claim external reality definitely existed, then the burden of proof would be on you - and you couldn’t meet it - likewise for someone who said it doesn’t exist.
Once again, you are saying the burden of proof only applies when there is a disagreement, and then it applies to both sides, so tell me again about the exception for the Atheist/Theist conversation. You are saying if they aren’t disagreeing, then there is no BOP, and if they are disagreeing, then both sides have the BOP, please explain why Theists have a burden of proof by virtue of claiming to have faith?

You meet your burden of the claim that something exists by virtue of having the conversation at all - with most other things being irrelevant to the conversation as they are unknowable.

Nope, not at all, you are the first BOPer to answer, and you have pretty much acknowledged that you can’t hit the BOP pitch either, nobody can, so the question becomes, what is the point of pitching the BOP when there is no ball to hit, why do you guys think it somehow makes a relevant point about Theism.

I think you may misunderstand - nothing I’ve said would be subject to BoP - as I’m not making any claims. I’m not really expressing the truth of an idea  - that’s when you subject yourself to BoP; if you don’t make claims, you can make assumptions from which you can argue the conclusions follow if the assumption is correct - but if the assumption is challenged, that’s where BoP comes into play.
Again, why the double standard, when you speak of what you believe, you aren’t making any claims, but when a Theist speaks of what they believe, they are making claims.  The whole BOP game is a matter of how the Atheist is challenging the Theist, so if there is a disagreement between the Atheist and the Theist, then they are challenging each other’s assumptions, how does this explain the one-sided BOP?

OK, my question is, why do you play the BOP game, what exactly do you think it establishes about Theism?

You’ve asked this a few times - but I left it till last; it’s fairly easy.

Humans have the ability to express ideas that can be false. We do it a lot, and we have an exceptional imagination for coming up with objects, things, explanations, ideas, etc - that are not true. We do it a lot. When you or I think up an explanation or an idea - it could be reality, or not.

In the context of an argument - we’re trying to establish or come to some agreement about what is or is not true. 

Normally - especially when talking about religion, most arguments boil down to a mere handful of underlying ideas or premises; if these premises are true, most of the rest follows. It’s is those premises that are contested. 

For example, using morality to show the existence of God, is a good one: the contested premise is that morality is an objective thing.

When a premise is contested ; both sides have to figure out what’s true or false. This is where BoP comes in: How do we establish who should, or shouldn’t, prove or disprove any particular claim? Who has “the burden” in any individual case? It can’t be arbitrary.

Some ideas can be disproven, some can be proven, but many are unfalsifiable: can’t really be proven wrong, in any practical sense. If the burden of proof is on the disproved - then you can win arguments by coming up with ideas that are not true - but hard or impossible to disprove - that would prevent any intellect discussion this way around, thus the burden of proof must therefore be on the positive claim.

I see it invoked - and invoke it - primarily in two scenarios:

1.) Where someone is being lazy, or specifically in cases where I’ve spent time and effort crafting large responses to points, and the other person is just throwing out claims without proof. It’s not fair in me to carry both the proof and disproof; so I’ll often challenge people to support their assertions in this context
My experience so far is that the BOPers I’ve encountered here are incredibly lazy, that’s why I refer to the automatic responses as Pavlovian and unconscious.  It seems that no matter what you say they are just waiting their turn to bark “BOP”, “logically incoherent”, and blah blah blah.  You are the first one that appears to have actually read and responded to what I’ve said, and it’s appreciated, even though you are wrong about everything 😊


2.) Where an assumption is challenged that is hard or impossible to be disproven even if it’s false: but is being presented as if truthful. IE - we have no reason to believe that this is actually true, but you’re arguing as if it is. The point here is mostly to highlight that the point relies on an unsupported assertion, despite any vehemence that results.

If you’re arguing that you don’t know whether your particular belief is true or false; only that you feel it’s true, or have faith that its true, and don’t argue that faith as a basis for arguing it is true in the context of the argument - you don’t need a burden, as you’re not claiming anything.
Again, is it really possible that the Atheist BOPers here are completely unaware that Theism is a matter of faith?  That’s never really been a secret.

If, however, and it’s quite common in many theists, that you want to express that unqualified faith, and unsupported position of feeling, but also want to use it; or your conclusions as a basis for expressing that others are wrong about something (I’m not suggesting you specifically - I haven’t read enough here), that’s when burden of proof applies.
Those Theists you are talking about tend come at me with both guns blazing, for some reason I really get under those guys skin, and I have more fun landing on them with both feet than I do Atheists.  Don’t be surprised when you and I are on the same side of those debates. 

Heck, as far as I can tell, you and I are on the same side of our own debate, it sure sounds to me like you are saying the BOP game is BS, you just don’t want to admit it.  But no worries, I’m OK with you always being wrong 😊
Shila
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@Sidewalker
Those Theists you are talking about tend come at me with both guns blazing, for some reason I really get under those guys skin, and I have more fun landing on them with both feet than I do Atheists.  Don’t be surprised when you and I are on the same side of those debates. 

Heck, as far as I can tell, you and I are on the same side of our own debate, it sure sounds to me like you are saying the BOP game is BS, you just don’t want to admit it.  But no worries, I’m OK with you always being wrong 😊
If you are on the same side of the debates as Ramshutu and you find he is always being wrong which would be your position as well since you are on the same side of the debates as Ramshutu.
Shouldn’t you turn to someone who is on the right side of the debate instead?

GnosticChristianBishop
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@Shila
Go away. You bore with your talking animal friends.

Regards
DL
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The only way Eve could have communicated with the serpent is if the serpent spoke
Nope
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@Sidewalker
You're in a religion forum nobody's coming after you you came here to target theists you're the bully here, fuck off.
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@Polytheist-Witch
You're in a religion forum nobody's coming after you you came here to target theists you're the bully here, fuck off.
That's interesting, you know, with me being a Theist and all.

You forgot to take your meds today, didn't you?